Asa was a good king. He walked in the ways of God. However he didn't please God towards the end of his life. When the king of Israel came to attack Asa and his kingdom, Asa didn’t depend upon God. Rather he was seeking help from the Syrian king. Asa missed God's support that he could get because he did not seek God's help. God's eyes are running to and fro throughout the whole Earth to give support to those who seek him from their heart. God is already ready to help. God is seeking people who is seeking his help. Our God is a good God. Many times we miss God’s help because we don't seek him from our heart as a first priority. God likes to see that your heart is completely devoted to him and you are completely dependent upon God especially in times of need through seeking him from your heart through prayer and trusting God completely. In times of need and crisis it is so natural that human heart seeks human help rather than seeking God’s help. Asa did that. But Jehoshaphat depended upon God in prayer and fasting in times of crisis and unexpected life issues. And God intervened in the situation and saved Jehoshaphat. Likewise let us completely trust, seek and depend upon our living God with full of our heart in times of challenge and crisis. If you do, God is faithful to answer your prayers and save you from every issues. We should depend upon God for everything. Our help comes from God not from man. We should be God depending people, not man depending people.
Photo credit: Shaira Dela Peña Commentary on 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 Literary context, features, and issues 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 (a) There is a debate among the scholars whether chapter 13 is prose or hymn. [1] (b) There are literary parallels for chapter 13 in Greek and Hellenistic Jewish literature. [2] (c) It is often suggested that chapter 13 interrupted the flow of Pauline discussion on the spiritual gifts [3] and this chapter used stylistic forms. [4] Consequently, scholars think that chapter 13 is out of place or it is a non-Pauline interpolation and literary critics even questioned the authorship of this chapter. [5] It is also suggested that Chapter 13 is a digression. [6] It has been recognized as an epideictic showpiece that is used to exhort Corinthians to keep love as their guiding principles of life in the community. [7] Commentary of 1 Corinthians 13:1-13 The need to have love (1 Corinthians 13:1-3) Agape is used 18 times in LXX a...